ALAMEDA, CALIFORNIA (April 30, 2006) -- The first day of this year’s
Commuters set a quick tone for what was to come.

This would be fast. And sudden. Nothing like the previous 78 Alameda Commuters
Championships.

There was a finality that Saturday, felt by most of the field. Alameda standout
junior Ryan Thomas, who tied for second place last year, shot a 78. And he
was suddenly down the road. Also feeling a sudden death were last year’s
medalist Ron Williams (78), and Pat Pernice (76), brother to the PGA Tour’s
Tom Pernice. So much for some of the local favorites.

There was a cut that first day, to the low 40 on the Earl Fry course and the
low 40 on the Jack Clark course (each par 71). As fate would have it, a score
of 75 made the cut on each course. The final round was the next day, with those
who made the cut switching courses.

The 2006 Commuters became a chaotic sprint, a 36-hole tournament for the first
time ever, when the golf courses at the Chuck Corica Golf Complex were deemed
unplayable on the scheduled first weekend. Record rains left the courses under
water.

The real heroes of this year’s championship were unseen, unheard, anonymous.
The greens crew at Alameda, all 22 of them, volunteered to work 14-hour days
to get these courses in shape for their superintendent, who happens to be 1975
Commuters champ Doug Poole. As if Poole weren’t busy enough, he was also
selected to run the event by the Greencoats, as chairman of this year’s
Commuters.

Poole and his crew performed a miracle. In one week they changed one big water
hazard into a very fast track.

On a sudden Sunday, Rick Reinsberg birdied two of the last three holes to win
his third Commuters title in four years. This outcome stunned two high school
golfers with national credentials, who became one of so many who felt sudden
finality in this year’s championship. Joe Bramlett and Rob Galletti were
preparing for a playoff when Reinsberg finished his round, and Reinsberg wasn’t
even part of their plans.

Bramlett, a senior at St. Francis High in Mountain View, had played in two
U.S. Amateurs and will play for Stanford next year. He shot a 5-under 66 on
the Jack Clark course to reach 4-under-par 138 for the championship, seemingly
the magic figure.

Galletti, a senior at De La Salle High in Concord, had shot a course-record
63 in an AJA event at Longbow GC in Mesa, Arizona, prior to the Commuters,
which made him one of the pre-tournament favorites. A first-round 69 had him
one stroke back going into the final round. But the second day went south early,
until he birdied his last five holes on the Clark course for a 69 and the same
138 total.

Reinsberg was playing the Fry course, and word had filtered to the clubhouse
that the two-time champ had bogeyed the 15th, a par 3. Bramlett and Galletti
felt certain they would play sudden death for the title.

Reinsberg had no idea where he stood, since golfers were spread over two golf
courses and there were no leaderboards.
“You just can’t worry about it,” Reinsberg said. “But
both courses had greens that were very firm, difficult to get it close. So
patience was the key.”

Reinsberg, who shot a 68 on the Clark to share the first day lead, lost some
of that patience when he did not birdie the 14th, a reachable par-5. And then
he missed a three-footer to bogey the 15th, which left him even par for the
day.

“There was a ballmark in my line on that short putt and I didn’t
fix it,” he said. “After those two holes, I was kind of fired up.”

He fired back with a pitching wedge to six feet on the 16th for birdie, and
sank a one-foot putt on the short par-4 17th to go 2-under for the day and
5-under for the championship. A pitching wedge inside five feet on the final
hole wrapped up the title, though he missed the putt.

“First, first, second, first,” Reinsberg said in his customary
soft voice. “That’s not bad for the last four years here.”

Indeed, the Commuters has been a springboard for the former Cal golfer. After
his first win in Alameda, in 2003, he played in the U.S. Open at Olympia Fields
in Chicago, made the match-play field in the U.S. Amateur, and advanced to
the quarterfinals in the U.S. Mid-Am. That earned him Northern California (NCGA)
Player of the Year.

Another Cal golfer won the Senior Championship

Jeff Early, who played for the Cal golf team in the 1960’s, had not won
a major championship in 40 years until his victory in the San Francisco City
Senior Championship a month earlier. The Castlewood CC golfer made it two in
a row with a victory in the Commuters Senior Championship, completing the Senior
Bay Area Slam.

Early hit an 8-iron to two feet for birdie on his final hole (No. 9) for an
even-par 71 on the Fry course to nip 1973 Commuters champ Bob Berg by one stroke.

“This was a good year to lead after the first round,” Early joked
after he learned he had won.

Doug Poole collapsed from exhaustion, into a very comfortable chair, after
the awards ceremony. The players were unanimous in their praise of the conditions
of both golf courses, and all signed a commemorative placard to thank Poole
for all his hard work.

Ron Salsig was the only west coast golf writer to receive
a national award from the Golf Writers Association of America this year. He
can be reached at rsalsig@pacbell.net

* * *

Final results from the Alameda Commuters
golf tournament, played at the Earl Fry North and Jack Clark South courses at
the Chuck Corica golf complex: